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Roland JX-10

The Roland JX-10 Super JX is a 12-voice analog synthesizer keyboard produced by Roland Corporation from 1986 to 1989, along with a rack-mounted version, the MKS-70. For nearly 30 years, it was the last true analog synthesizer made by Roland and has been critically acclaimed as one of their classic analog instruments.[1] In 2015, Roland once again started producing analog synthesizers beginning with their JD-XA and JD-Xi keyboards as analog/digital crossover synthesizers. The design on the JX-10 is essentially two Roland JX-8P synthesizers put together, with a 76-note velocity-sensitive keyboard with aftertouch. It also includes features not found on the JX-8P, including a simple 1-track sketchbook sequencer and a delay effect (which works like a "MIDI delay" by delaying one tone rather than acting as a true DSP delay effect). However, the JX-10 is not exactly the same as "two JX-8P's" because the chorus is not identical to the JX-8P (hence the chorus sounds different between the JX-8P and the JX-10 with single patches). The JX-10 also has a slightly different amplifier section as well as different electronic components which further distinguish its sound from its predecessor, the JX-8P.

Roland Super JX (Roland JX-10)
ManufacturerRoland
Dates1986-1989
PriceUS$2,750
UK£1,800
JP¥298,000
Technical specifications
Polyphony12-voice in 'WHOLE' and 'SPLIT' mode, 6-voice in 'DUAL' mode
Timbrality2-part ('SPLIT'/'DUAL' modes)
Oscillator2 DCOs per voice/4 in 'DUAL' mode. Waveforms: SAW/SQUARE/FIXED PULSE/NOISE. Oscillator sync, xmod.
LFO1 sine/square/random=noise with delay and rate
Synthesis typeAnalog Subtractive
Filter24dB/oct resonant low-pass, non-resonant high-pass
Attenuator2 ADSR Envelopes/4 in 'DUAL' Mode. They both have 3 levels (and '0') of "Key Follow"
Aftertouch expressionYes
Velocity expressionYes
Storage memory50 preset tones/50 user tones/64 patches, optional M-64C memory cartridges holding 50 tones
Effectschorus, delay ('chase play' using voices, not a 'real' delay effect)
Input/output
Keyboard76 keys
Left-hand controlPitch bend Lever with upward moving controlling LFO
External controlMIDI for playing notes/PG-800 programmer for sound editing

Programmability edit

Like most synthesizers of the time, the JX-10 is programmed by selecting the desired parameter through a keypad and editing that parameter using a data wheel Roland dubbed the "Alpha-Dial". Like the JX-8P, this editing technique can be bypassed by connecting a PG-800 device to the programmer port located on the back of the keyboard synthesizer, or on the front of the rack-mounted version. Alternatively the JX-10 and MKS-70 can be programmed over MIDI using a controller device such as the KiwiTechnics Patch Editor (a firmware update is required on the JX-10).

Factory presets edit

The JX-10 and MKS-70's factory presets were created by Eric Persing and Dan DeSousa.

Playing modes edit

The JX-10 combines two completely separate 6-voice Tone Modules (A-Upper and B-Lower) which allow it to function as a single 12-voice synthesizer or as two 6-voice synths capable of layering or splitting two different Tones simultaneously. There are six playing modes:

  • Dual Mode - layers sounds from both Tone modules which can be balanced
  • Split Mode - allows for split-keyboard play of the Tone modules, upper and lower sections can overlap
  • Whole A - Upper Tone Module controls all 12 voices
  • Whole B - Lower Tone Module controls all 12 voices
  • Touch Voice Mode - adds velocity switching
  • Cross-Fade Mode - controlled by the amount of velocity, one tone fades in while the other tone fades out

Memory edit

The JX-10 has space for 64 patches in its internal memory, each of which can be composed with one (12-voice) or two tones (rendering the synth 6-voice polyphonic). These tones can be selected individually, combined together, or split. Of the 100 available tones, 50 of them can be edited and saved to memory; the other 50 are factory patches. The JX-10's memory can also be expanded by plugging in a M-16C, M-32C (very rare, originally only available on the Japanese market) or M-64C memory cartridge. If a cartridge is inserted, the JX-10's built in sketchbook sequencer can be used (it can only be used if a cartridge is present). The JX-10 / MKS-70 can also read and write tone data for the JX-8P this way (which in turn can only use the M-16C). The M-64C can store 64 patches and 100 tones; the M-16C can store 32 tones only (no patches).

MIDI implementation edit

The MIDI implementation on the JX-10 is somewhat faulty and lacks common features. Most importantly it cannot send or receive Tone or Patches by MIDI SysEx. The MKS-70 (rack version of the JX-10) does however send and receive tones and patches over SysEx because it has different firmware in EPROM. If the firmware in the JX-10 is updated, then it will support SysEx.

The JX-10 transmits MIDI Control Change 123 (all notes off) instead of "normal" MIDI Note-Off messages every time a key is released (the JX-8P does this as well). This can be filtered out by editing CC 123 in the sequencer if it creates any problems; normally it does not.

MKS-70 edit

Like the JX-8P, the JX-10 also has a 2U rack-mounted counterpart called the MKS-70 which was available 1986–1989. It is basically the same as the JX-10, except that the MKS-70's tones can be edited through MIDI using SysEx (this can be rectified on the JX-10, see below).

Display edit

The JX-8P, JX-10 and the MKS-70 use vacuum fluorescent displays which give the instruments their characteristic green/blue glowing display. In some cases these displays can fail with age, indicating 888888888888 or having other issues. One cause of these problems is the corrosion of a small coil component in the display driver circuit. While Roland used similar displays across a number of products at this time, interchangeability of displays between products is limited. Replacement parts are scarce and some experimenters have replaced the vacuum display with an LCD device and supporting circuitry. In January 2014 a custom supply of new coils became available for the JX-8/JX-10 and the MKS-70. As a spin off project from the Vecoven firmware update, in 2016, a full replacement display was made available for users unable to fix their displays with a new coil.

Firmware update edit

The firmware for the circuitry on the Assigner board, the part of the synthesizer controlling the voices and managing MIDI, has been criticised as incomplete and inferior, especially on the JX-10.[2] Successful attempts have been made to improve the firmware of the JX-10 as well as on its rack-mounted version, the MKS-70.

A modified firmware for the JX-10 was first released by Colin Fraser. It gave the JX-10 the additional MKS-70 functionality: SysEx editing of tone parameters via MIDI. The update is made by exchanging a socketed EPROM chip (a 32 KB 27C256) on the Assigner board.

In 2013, Frederic Vecoven started rewriting a JX-10/MKS-70 firmware from scratch, building on Fraser's analysis of the original code. The firmware retrofit offers advanced MIDI control via SysEx and NRPN, fast bulk dump of patches and parameters, more flexibility in assigning the C1 and C2 controls, and an arpeggiator mode for the JX-10. The update is also made by exchanging the EPROM for one with the new firmware.

While Vecoven still sells EPROMs with the upgraded firmware (V3.09), Fraser no longer supports his own project as he feels there is no longer a market for it: "I have decided therefore to stop selling my JX ROM. It would be daft to go to the bother of upgrading your ROM, and not getting the extra features of Fred's ROM for the reasonable extra cost."

Frederic Vecoven has developed a sophisticated arrangement of simulation tools that allows running of Super JX and display firmware on Apple and Linux platforms. All firmware development took place using these tools, only requiring a laptop during design before final integration testing on instruments.

Combined hardware and firmware upgrade edit

Building on his firmware rewrite, Frederic Vecoven has also finished a hardware modification. To achieve pulse-width modulation, the JX-10 is equipped with daughter boards and faster CPUs. A rewrite of the firmware makes use of the added processing power to implement additional functions.

Added functionality includes:

  • Pulse-Width Modulation, controllable by envelope or LFO
  • an additional LFO (LFO2)
  • additional LFO wave forms and modulations
  • enhanced six-stage envelope generators ENV1 and ENV2 similar to those in the Roland Alpha Juno series
  • two additional ADSR envelope generators (ENV3 and ENV4)
  • free-running envelopes
  • NRPN control of tone parameters, controlling parameters of one tone, or both, in real time

In addition to replacing the old firmware, the upgrade requires a substantial modification of the JX hardware. Each of the two sound boards has to be equipped with an additional PCB that has to be connected with 36 wires soldered to the sound board. The original 8031 CPUs have to be desoldered and replaced by more modern 80C320 CPUs. Experienced solderers have reported to take several hours to finish the mod.[3]

Vecoven states that the PWM mod makes use of resources already present in the original hardware, so that it can be suspected that the missing PWM capability was scrapped in the later stages of the JX-10 design.

Display upgrade edit

In 2013 Frederic Vecoven attached a graphic VFD to an MKS-70 using a PIC micro containing firmware to decode the Roland display protocol. It was developed further into a concept that took advantage of additional data and graphic VFD capabilities. Frederic Vecoven handed the project over to Guy Wilkinson in 2015 who developed a replacement display solution with hardware, firmware and detailed fitting guide for the JX-10. The MKS-70 followed shortly after when Serge Pomorski designed the fitting technique on his fully upgraded instrument. The replacement display bypasses the original Roland display hardware and takes advantage of additional data transmitted by the Vecoven firmware to enhance the layout and readability.

Notable users edit

References edit

  1. ^ Derek Johnson (May 1994). . Sound on Sound. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2016-10-10.
  2. ^ "Super JX". Vecoven.com.
  3. ^ "Roland MKS-70 Upgrade/Modification beta testers wanted". Gearspace.com. p. 29. Retrieved 20 February 2022.

External links edit

  • SUPER JX-10 & MKS-70 HOMEPAGE - A Website Dedicated To The JX-10 & MKS-70 Synths - Tones, Utilities, Info, DIY's, Reference Materials

Further reading edit

  • "Super JX". Sound On Sound. June 1986. pp. 8–9. ISSN 0951-6816. OCLC 925234032.

roland, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, february, 2022, lea. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Roland JX 10 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Roland JX 10 Super JX is a 12 voice analog synthesizer keyboard produced by Roland Corporation from 1986 to 1989 along with a rack mounted version the MKS 70 For nearly 30 years it was the last true analog synthesizer made by Roland and has been critically acclaimed as one of their classic analog instruments 1 In 2015 Roland once again started producing analog synthesizers beginning with their JD XA and JD Xi keyboards as analog digital crossover synthesizers The design on the JX 10 is essentially two Roland JX 8P synthesizers put together with a 76 note velocity sensitive keyboard with aftertouch It also includes features not found on the JX 8P including a simple 1 track sketchbook sequencer and a delay effect which works like a MIDI delay by delaying one tone rather than acting as a true DSP delay effect However the JX 10 is not exactly the same as two JX 8P s because the chorus is not identical to the JX 8P hence the chorus sounds different between the JX 8P and the JX 10 with single patches The JX 10 also has a slightly different amplifier section as well as different electronic components which further distinguish its sound from its predecessor the JX 8P Roland Super JX Roland JX 10 ManufacturerRolandDates1986 1989PriceUS 2 750 UK 1 800 JP 298 000Technical specificationsPolyphony12 voice in WHOLE and SPLIT mode 6 voice in DUAL modeTimbrality2 part SPLIT DUAL modes Oscillator2 DCOs per voice 4 in DUAL mode Waveforms SAW SQUARE FIXED PULSE NOISE Oscillator sync xmod LFO1 sine square random noise with delay and rateSynthesis typeAnalog SubtractiveFilter24dB oct resonant low pass non resonant high passAttenuator2 ADSR Envelopes 4 in DUAL Mode They both have 3 levels and 0 of Key Follow Aftertouch expressionYesVelocity expressionYesStorage memory50 preset tones 50 user tones 64 patches optional M 64C memory cartridges holding 50 tonesEffectschorus delay chase play using voices not a real delay effect Input outputKeyboard76 keysLeft hand controlPitch bend Lever with upward moving controlling LFOExternal controlMIDI for playing notes PG 800 programmer for sound editing Contents 1 Programmability 2 Factory presets 3 Playing modes 4 Memory 5 MIDI implementation 6 MKS 70 7 Display 8 Firmware update 9 Combined hardware and firmware upgrade 10 Display upgrade 11 Notable users 12 References 13 External links 14 Further readingProgrammability editLike most synthesizers of the time the JX 10 is programmed by selecting the desired parameter through a keypad and editing that parameter using a data wheel Roland dubbed the Alpha Dial Like the JX 8P this editing technique can be bypassed by connecting a PG 800 device to the programmer port located on the back of the keyboard synthesizer or on the front of the rack mounted version Alternatively the JX 10 and MKS 70 can be programmed over MIDI using a controller device such as the KiwiTechnics Patch Editor a firmware update is required on the JX 10 Factory presets editThe JX 10 and MKS 70 s factory presets were created by Eric Persing and Dan DeSousa Playing modes editThe JX 10 combines two completely separate 6 voice Tone Modules A Upper and B Lower which allow it to function as a single 12 voice synthesizer or as two 6 voice synths capable of layering or splitting two different Tones simultaneously There are six playing modes Dual Mode layers sounds from both Tone modules which can be balanced Split Mode allows for split keyboard play of the Tone modules upper and lower sections can overlap Whole A Upper Tone Module controls all 12 voices Whole B Lower Tone Module controls all 12 voices Touch Voice Mode adds velocity switching Cross Fade Mode controlled by the amount of velocity one tone fades in while the other tone fades outMemory editThe JX 10 has space for 64 patches in its internal memory each of which can be composed with one 12 voice or two tones rendering the synth 6 voice polyphonic These tones can be selected individually combined together or split Of the 100 available tones 50 of them can be edited and saved to memory the other 50 are factory patches The JX 10 s memory can also be expanded by plugging in a M 16C M 32C very rare originally only available on the Japanese market or M 64C memory cartridge If a cartridge is inserted the JX 10 s built in sketchbook sequencer can be used it can only be used if a cartridge is present The JX 10 MKS 70 can also read and write tone data for the JX 8P this way which in turn can only use the M 16C The M 64C can store 64 patches and 100 tones the M 16C can store 32 tones only no patches MIDI implementation editThe MIDI implementation on the JX 10 is somewhat faulty and lacks common features Most importantly it cannot send or receive Tone or Patches by MIDI SysEx The MKS 70 rack version of the JX 10 does however send and receive tones and patches over SysEx because it has different firmware in EPROM If the firmware in the JX 10 is updated then it will support SysEx The JX 10 transmits MIDI Control Change 123 all notes off instead of normal MIDI Note Off messages every time a key is released the JX 8P does this as well This can be filtered out by editing CC 123 in the sequencer if it creates any problems normally it does not MKS 70 editLike the JX 8P the JX 10 also has a 2U rack mounted counterpart called the MKS 70 which was available 1986 1989 It is basically the same as the JX 10 except that the MKS 70 s tones can be edited through MIDI using SysEx this can be rectified on the JX 10 see below Display editThe JX 8P JX 10 and the MKS 70 use vacuum fluorescent displays which give the instruments their characteristic green blue glowing display In some cases these displays can fail with age indicating 888888888888 or having other issues One cause of these problems is the corrosion of a small coil component in the display driver circuit While Roland used similar displays across a number of products at this time interchangeability of displays between products is limited Replacement parts are scarce and some experimenters have replaced the vacuum display with an LCD device and supporting circuitry In January 2014 a custom supply of new coils became available for the JX 8 JX 10 and the MKS 70 As a spin off project from the Vecoven firmware update in 2016 a full replacement display was made available for users unable to fix their displays with a new coil Firmware update editThe firmware for the circuitry on the Assigner board the part of the synthesizer controlling the voices and managing MIDI has been criticised as incomplete and inferior especially on the JX 10 2 Successful attempts have been made to improve the firmware of the JX 10 as well as on its rack mounted version the MKS 70 A modified firmware for the JX 10 was first released by Colin Fraser It gave the JX 10 the additional MKS 70 functionality SysEx editing of tone parameters via MIDI The update is made by exchanging a socketed EPROM chip a 32 KB 27C256 on the Assigner board In 2013 Frederic Vecoven started rewriting a JX 10 MKS 70 firmware from scratch building on Fraser s analysis of the original code The firmware retrofit offers advanced MIDI control via SysEx and NRPN fast bulk dump of patches and parameters more flexibility in assigning the C1 and C2 controls and an arpeggiator mode for the JX 10 The update is also made by exchanging the EPROM for one with the new firmware While Vecoven still sells EPROMs with the upgraded firmware V3 09 Fraser no longer supports his own project as he feels there is no longer a market for it I have decided therefore to stop selling my JX ROM It would be daft to go to the bother of upgrading your ROM and not getting the extra features of Fred s ROM for the reasonable extra cost Frederic Vecoven has developed a sophisticated arrangement of simulation tools that allows running of Super JX and display firmware on Apple and Linux platforms All firmware development took place using these tools only requiring a laptop during design before final integration testing on instruments Combined hardware and firmware upgrade editBuilding on his firmware rewrite Frederic Vecoven has also finished a hardware modification To achieve pulse width modulation the JX 10 is equipped with daughter boards and faster CPUs A rewrite of the firmware makes use of the added processing power to implement additional functions Added functionality includes Pulse Width Modulation controllable by envelope or LFO an additional LFO LFO2 additional LFO wave forms and modulations enhanced six stage envelope generators ENV1 and ENV2 similar to those in the Roland Alpha Juno series two additional ADSR envelope generators ENV3 and ENV4 free running envelopes NRPN control of tone parameters controlling parameters of one tone or both in real timeIn addition to replacing the old firmware the upgrade requires a substantial modification of the JX hardware Each of the two sound boards has to be equipped with an additional PCB that has to be connected with 36 wires soldered to the sound board The original 8031 CPUs have to be desoldered and replaced by more modern 80C320 CPUs Experienced solderers have reported to take several hours to finish the mod 3 Vecoven states that the PWM mod makes use of resources already present in the original hardware so that it can be suspected that the missing PWM capability was scrapped in the later stages of the JX 10 design Display upgrade editIn 2013 Frederic Vecoven attached a graphic VFD to an MKS 70 using a PIC micro containing firmware to decode the Roland display protocol It was developed further into a concept that took advantage of additional data and graphic VFD capabilities Frederic Vecoven handed the project over to Guy Wilkinson in 2015 who developed a replacement display solution with hardware firmware and detailed fitting guide for the JX 10 The MKS 70 followed shortly after when Serge Pomorski designed the fitting technique on his fully upgraded instrument The replacement display bypasses the original Roland display hardware and takes advantage of additional data transmitted by the Vecoven firmware to enhance the layout and readability Notable users editVince Clarke of Erasure Can be heard on The Circus The Innocents and Wild albums Pink Floyd On A Momentary Lapse of Reason KISS Featured in the music video for Reason To Live and used by Bruce Kulick on the Crazy Nights Tour Tangerine Dream On Underwater Sunlight Duran Duran On Notorious Tim Simenon On Neneh Cherry s single Buffalo Stance ascending hook riff Nik Kershaw On Radio Musicola and The Works Angelo Badalamenti On the soundtracks of Twin Peaks Lyle Mays On the Pat Metheny Group albums Letter from Home The Road to You We Live Here Imaginary Day Speaking of Now and The Way Up The JX 10 was also used on his solo album Street Dreams The Mays Pad patch is named after him and is based on his signature Prophet 5 Oberheim 4 lead voice sound The Human League Jean Michel Jarre Jane Child Laserdance Yellowjackets Uberzone Vangelis Astral Projection Josh WinkReferences edit Derek Johnson May 1994 Roland JX10 Super JX Analogue Polysynth Retro Sound on Sound Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2016 10 10 Super JX Vecoven com Roland MKS 70 Upgrade Modification beta testers wanted Gearspace com p 29 Retrieved 20 February 2022 External links editSUPER JX 10 amp MKS 70 HOMEPAGE A Website Dedicated To The JX 10 amp MKS 70 Synths Tones Utilities Info DIY s Reference MaterialsFurther reading edit Super JX Sound On Sound June 1986 pp 8 9 ISSN 0951 6816 OCLC 925234032 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Roland JX 10 amp oldid 1181015542, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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